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Recent top reviews

#WhyInsideMatters #IntelInside Intel inaugurated its third-generation Core (aka "Ivy Bridge") line of processors in April with the Core i7-3770K, a higher-end mainstream chip aimed at those who wanted a taste of top performance but couldn't afford (or didn't want to splurge on) a more powerful San… (View complete review)

★★★★★

★★★★★

Deepak

Apr 30, 2014

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Excellent Processor!

I bought this processor for home VMWARE server deployment. It has all the key visualization features and at a great price.

★★★★★

★★★★★

Remmy pp

Feb 3, 2014

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i5 3470

I'm unfortunate that the processor sent to me did not respond. I've requested for replacement ofthe product i5 3470 processor and waiting for the response from flipkart

With regagrs,remmy

★★★★★

★★★★★

Arijit Ray

Jan 22, 2014

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Intel is the way

Intel is doing really well with its i3, i5 and i7 processors. Excellent performance for its price and I'm extremely happy with it.

★★★★★

★★★★★

Kaushal Panchal

Jan 19, 2014

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Awesome Processor

A very Good product.

I have installed it on Intel DH77EB and 4GB Corsair Vengeance DDR3 4 GB 1600MHz.

I researched a lot about computer components before assembling my rig. I was confused between i5 3470 and i5 3570k, but finally opted for this. Trust me, it's a wise decision. The only difference between those two is the integrated graphics (3470 has HD 2500 while 3570k has HD 4000) and that 3570k costs around Rs.3000 more. I instead invested that money in getting a better graphics card (I bought ATI Radeon HD 7750 1gb DDR5), which ultimately paid off. This processor is a dark horse....good for those who are going to buy an external graphics card.

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Awesome Processor

This processor is awesome as it appears. I have used this for my academic simulations and utilized upto 80% cpu for more than 2 hrs, the consistency in performance was awesome...in windows 7, I get 7.5 rating for this processor which is really good. Go for it guys...

#WhyInsideMatters #IntelInside Intel inaugurated its third-generation Core (aka "Ivy Bridge") line of processors in April with the Core i7-3770K, a higher-end mainstream chip aimed at those who wanted a taste of top performance but couldn't afford (or didn't want to splurge on) a more powerful Sandy Bridge–Extreme model. With its latest releases Intel is now rounding out the rest of the family, to help up the center the Ivy Bridge launch didn't focus much attention on. One way it's doing this is by release of the Core i5-3470 , a desktop processor priced at 21,179.00 rs list that i… #WhyInsideMatters #IntelInside Intel inaugurated its third-generation Core (aka "Ivy Bridge") line of processors in April with the Core i7-3770K, a higher-end mainstream chip aimed at those who wanted a taste of top performance but couldn't afford (or didn't want to splurge on) a more powerful Sandy Bridge–Extreme model. With its latest releases Intel is now rounding out the rest of the family, to help up the center the Ivy Bridge launch didn't focus much attention on. One way it's doing this is by release of the Core i5-3470 , a desktop processor priced at 21,179.00 rs list that is intended to bestow the benefits of the new technology to everyday users who don't quite need every possible bell and whistle. The chip succeeds at this, but don't expect it to deliver miracles.Like all Core i5 chips, the Core i5-3470 is a quad-core CPU that is not armed with Hyper-Threading—in other words, it delivers four processing threads rather than the eight you may see with something like the Core i7-3770K. (To get eight threads, you have to move up to Core i7.) The Core i5-3470's base clock speed is a reasonable 3.2GHz, though this can rise to as much as 3.6GHz when Turbo Boost is activated and you have the proper electrical and thermal headroom. The chip has a cache size of 6MB, which is par for the Core i5 course.Additional features on the Core i5-3470 comprise all the standards you get on Ivy Bridge chips using Intel's newest 22nm process technology. The integrated video system is Intel HD Graphics 2500 (as opposed to the higher-end 4000), which can render DirectX 11 (DX11) video and has a base render frequency of 650MHz and a maximum dynamic frequency of 1.1GHz. PCI Express (PCIe) 3.0, DDR3 memory up to 1,600MHz, and USB 3.0 are all supported natively, as are the full range of Intel's other technologies, including Quick Sync Video for faster video transcoding, InTru 3D for stereoscopic 3D, Secure Key, OS Guard, vPro, and so on. And, like other Ivy Bridge processors, although the Core i5-3470 is designed for Intel's 7 Series chipset, it is fully backward compatible with second-generation Core ("Sandy Bridge") motherboards using the LGA1155 socket as well.

PerformanceAs far as performance is concerned, it's worth noting that this release is not an exact repeat of what we saw last year with Sandy Bridge. There, Intel's flagship was the Core i7-2600K , but the hidden jewel was the Core i5-2500K —which offered closely matched speed and a fully unlocked overclocking multiplier for considerably less money. (We saw this process repeated, on an even grander scale, with the Sandy Bridge–E Core i7-3960X Extreme Edition and Core i7-3930K.) Here, however, the Core i5-3470 is not in the direct line of succession, as it were, so the same situation can't occur. (The multiplier on this chip is not fully unlocked, for one thing.) The chip in the equivalent position now would be the Core i5-3570K, which we have not yet tested.

Still, the Core i5-3470 represents a bit of an improvement over the Core i5-2500K in some key areas. Our Adobe Photoshop CS5 test, in which we apply a dozen filters and effects to a large image, took two seconds faster on the newer chip (3 minutes 2 seconds, as opposed to 3:04); exactly the same thing was true of converting a video using Handbrake (the time dropped from 40 to 38 seconds). Rendering an image in POV-Ray 3.7 took 4 minutes 18 seconds on the Core i5-3470 and 4 minutes 1 second on the Core i5-2500K. CineBench R11.5 returned a multicore CPU score of 5.67 for the newer CPU and 5.41 for the older one, with an even tighter gap present between the two when we only used one CPU for the test (1.48 for the Core i5-2500K, 1.51 for the Core i5-3470).

The biggest jumps we saw in our testing were both with regards to encryption: AIDA64 took full advantage of the Core i5-3470's expanded AES instructions, returning a score of 473,754 for that chip as opposed to 373,772 for the Core i5-2500K; and in TrueCrypt 7.1a the Core i5-3470 attained an AES-Twofish-Serpent mean rate of 162MBps, compared with the Core i5-2500K's 142MBps. There was also a striking differential in power usage: Under full load, our test system drew 137 watts when loaded with the Core i5-2500K—about the same as we saw with the Core i7-3770K—but only 120 watts with the Core i5-3470. Intel's tweaks in this area have clearly paid off.